German city battling elusive ‘new-look’ neo-Nazis

Authorities in the east of the country push back as a new Internet-savvy generation of fascists puts a fresh spin on old problems

By Chris Cottrell / Reuters, DORTMUND, Germany

Germany’s neo-Nazis are hanging up their bomber jackets, unlacing their black leather boots and even grabbing a bite to eat at their local Turkish kebab shop.

Eschewing their predecessors’ fierce aversion to anything “un-German,” they blend into the local community and easily escape detection. However, police and experts say this new generation of young fascists is potentially far more dangerous and reckless than their older peers.

“Today a neo-Nazi can eat Turkish kebabs and still go out and beat up immigrants,” said journalist Johannes Radke, who has reported on the German far-right for more than a decade. “They say, ‘we’ll let everyone do whatever they want as long as they’re a Nazi at heart.’”

Headquartered in the down-at-heel western industrial city of Dortmund, a new group known as the Autonomous Nationalists (AN) is at the forefront of this transformation.

They share the hardcore xenophobia of older cadres in the far-right, but their appearance and tactics are those of a dynamic, Internet-savvy youth movement.

They wear stylish running shoes and expensive brand name windbreakers and communicate with each other via Twitter. The use of English slogans at protests, for decades taboo in far-right circles, is widespread.

“They see themselves as the avant-garde of the Nazi scene,” Radke said. “They’re much more professional than some drunk, dim-witted skinhead — and more dangerous.”

Authorities and residents across Germany have become more sensitive to the threat of far-right militants since revelations last year that a neo-Nazi cell waged a seven-year racist killing spree throughout the country, murdering nine people, mostly ethnic Turks, one of them in Dortmund.

The cell’s existence only came to light by chance after two members committed suicide following a botched bank robbery. The murders forced an overhaul of Germany’s intelligence services.

HITLER BANNERS

Nearly seven decades after the fall of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime, far-right groups remain marginalized in Germany, with most of their support tending to come from the impoverished former communist east.

However, the so-called “Zwickau cell” shows that the danger is not confined to any one area of the country. Left unchecked, experts say, neo-Nazis could again stage deadly attacks.

This year, keen to show they take the threat seriously, federal authorities have been weighing a possible ban on the only far-right party to hold seats in any German legislature.

The National Democratic Party, which sits in two state assemblies, is racist and anti-Semitic, intelligence services say. The party is careful not to break German laws forbidding Nazi symbols, denial of the Holocaust and public expressions of support for Hitler.

The Autonomous Nationalists have no such qualms. They have no appetite for political maneuvering and readily unfurl banners quoting Hitler at their protest rallies.

“Many Nazis moved here because they thought this was a broken city,” Dortmund mayor Ullrich Sierau told Reuters, adding that extremists exploited the fact that the city of half-a-million has one of the highest unemployment rates in the region.

Dortmund’s new police chief Norbert Wesseler said there were 131 crimes tied to far-right militants including violent assaults in the city in the first half of the year.

“The number of offences has risen considerably over earlier years,” he said, without giving comparative figures.